Moonlight Scandals
A de Vincent Novel
-
- €2.49
Publisher Description
It takes a fearless woman to love the most scandalous man alive in New York Times Bestselling Author Jennifer L. Armentrout’s breathtaking novel
Even a ghost hunter like Rosie Herpin couldn’t have foreseen the fateful meeting between two mourners that has brought her so intimately close to the notorious and seductive Devlin de Vincent. Everyone in New Orleans knows he’s heir to a dark family curse that both frightens and enthralls. To the locals, Devlin is the devil. To Rosie, he’s a man who’s stoking her wildest fantasies. When a brutal attack on her friend is linked to the de Vincents, he becomes a mystery she may be risking her life to solve.
Devlin knows what he wants from this sexy and adventurous woman. But what does Rosie want from him? It’s a question that becomes more pressing—and more dangerous—when he suspects her of prying into the shadows of his past.
Now, the legends surrounding the de Vincents may not be myths at all. But if she’s to discover the truth, she must follow them straight into the arms of the man she can’t resist—the handsome devil himself.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The suspenseful third de Vincent contemporary romance satisfyingly concludes the brothers' story, even as it adds new and sometimes baffling melodramatic elements. Rosie Herpin lost her husband to suicide 10 years ago, so she has some sympathy for wealthy Devlin de Vincent, whose parents as far as the world knows both took their own lives. Devlin is rigid, arrogant, and suspicious, but Rosie, a free-spirited New Orleans paranormal investigator, is nevertheless drawn to the complicated man beneath the abrasive surface, though each struggles to trust the other. Devlin has some reasons for his appalling past actions, but knowing what he's capable of may make it difficult for readers to accept him as a romantic hero. However, Rosie is a resonant character and has an admirable ability to stand up to Devlin. The pair's intense chemistry, along with the high-stakes soap operatics of the de Vincents, will engage readers willing to overlook Devlin's moral grayness.)